Injustice provided us with a natural desire for freedom
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Cyril Pazderka was born on 1 March 1946 in Bořetice in South Moravia as the seventh of eight children of Jan and Maria Pazderka. The family run a farm, was Catholic and his father was a member of the People’s Party. After 1948 they were being forced to join the JZD, which they refused for a long time. In 1953, brother Stanislav enlisted in the Auxiliary Technical Battalions. His father was sent to Cejl and Kuřim prisons for three months in 1956 for resisting the collectivisation. The family finally joined the agricultural coop in 1959. He attended a municipal school in Bořetice, an elementary school in Velké Pavlovice and then apprenticed as a gardener in Lednice. In 1968, his Brother Josef emigrated to Austria, joined the Jesuits and was ordained a priest in Innsbruck in 1974. From 1975 he worked in London at the Velehrad Compatriot Centre. As the borders remained closed, the family met with him in the Hungarian People’s Republic, mostly in Budapest and near the Balaton lake. Josef brought religious and exile literature to these meetings, which the siblings took home to Czechoslovakia. In 1972 Cyril Pazderka married and moved with his wife to Jihlava. He and his friends renovated a cottage near the town, which became a place for spiritual meetings under the guidance of the Salesian monks. In November 1989, he participated in the organisation of the Jihlava parish trip to Rome for the canonisation of Agnes of Bohemia and took part in the gatherings in Jihlava and at Letná in Prague. After the fall of the regime, Brother Josef returned from emigration. At the time of the interview (July 2025) Cyril Pazderka lived in Jihlava.